2013-01-29
2013-02-06
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the minister of intelligence and aatomic energy last week and he said to me if the assad regime falls it will be bad for the iranian regime. and he said "iran needs to lose this game in syria." so whether the israelis are correct or not, whether it will turn out that the devil they knew was better, they don't think so and they think that, in fact, iran will be less emboldened if they lose assad, their key arab ally in the region. >> ifill: is it fair to say, margaret, that whether we're talking about turkey's role or jordan's role, the u.s. role or israel's role, all of this circles back to iran? >> you know, it does, gwen, it really does. all these countries, one, are concerned about iranian influence in the region. two, are concerned about iran's nuclear weapons program and, three, some would say there's the sort of sunni/shiite divide which seems to become more and more a fault line in this arab and persian world. so it is very interesting that, for instance, as you know the israelis and the turks have not been getting along at all ever since the flotilla incident a couple of years

where a coal plant closed. they're building two major wind energy projects in the same area where plans for a coal plant were scrapped. >> duke energy, a company you remember, that lent $10 million to the democratic party for its convention in charlotte -- in other words, a company with close ties to the obama administration. >> chase powers said it was forced to abandon plans for the coal plant because of e.p.a.'s tough anti-coal regulations. the plant would have created 3,900 jobs. >>gretchen: a christian school is suing two teachers who refused to give proof of their faith. the school requires all teachers to fill out a questionnaire about where they go to church and about their faith. two teachers refused to fill it out and weren't rehired. they threatened to sue, but the school is going to sue them saying the first amendment protects their right to hire teachers w share their belief. >>steve: a group of tphaoeudists are worried -- a group of nudists are worried they won't have anywhere to take it off this summeradly. a number of beaches in long island, brian, were heavily damaged b

. meanwhile, iran declared to the international atomic energy agency that it plans to add new centrifuges to speed up urananium enrichment. that's stoked fears in the west and israel that iran is closer to acquiring a nuclear weapon. tonight, margaret warner, on assignment in the middle east reports on the growing debate within israel about how much of a threat iran really is. >> reporter: prime minister benjamin netanyahu strode on stage last week a chastened victor in parliamentary elections. his likud party bloc shaved by voters asking for a focus on kitchen table issues. netanyahu had this answer. >> ( translated ): the first challenge is and will continue to be preventing iran from having nuclear weapons. >> reporter: israelis should have expected nothing less, says channel 10 defense correspondent alon ben-david. >> netanyahu sees removing the iranian threat as his lifetime mission, as a historical mission; as if history has put him in this specific time and place to relieve the israeli people from the iranian nuclear threat. >> reporter: but that sense of mission drove a very publi

to celebrate mass and can vote for pope until he turns 80, two years from now. u.s. secretary of energy stephen chu announced today he's stepping down. during his tenure, he came under fire for the handling of a solar energy loan to solyndra. it later went bankrupt and laid off all its workers. chu will stay on at least until the end of february, or until president obama names his successor. nasa paused today to remember the lives of seven astronauts who died ten years ago when space shuttle "columbia" broke apart in the air over texas. a few hundred people gathered at kennedy space center in florida, including family members and other astronauts. the accident happened as the shuttle was returning home with only 16 minutes left till landing. the brash, bold-talking former mayor of new york city, ed koch, died today of congestive heart failure at a hospital in new york. >> good morning. i'm ed koch, and i'm running for mayor. how am i doing? >> sreenivasan: ed koch was most at home on the streets of manhattan. a quintessential new yorker, the larger than life koch, who ran city hall from 1978 to

warming, we need to invest very heavily and create jobs in weatherization, energy efficiency, and sustainable energy. that's one area, ed, if we are aggressive, we can create many millions of jobs rather quickly. second of all, we have got to demand that wall street stop sitting on the huge amounts of money they are and get that money out to the productive economy so small and medium-sized businesses have the capital to expand and also create new jobs. >> that is a plan that needs to be discussed, and americans out to get behind. senator bernie sanders, thanks for joining us tonight. i appreciate it. >>> coming up, geraldo rivera wants to be new jersey's next senator. we have an exclusive first look at his first campaign ad, next. >>> and our panel will weigh in on geraldo as well as scott brown's political future. eugene brown, michael tomasky, and michelle goldberg will join me. stay tuned. you're watching "the ed show" on msnbc. we're right back. have given way to sleeping. tossing and turning where sleepless nights yield to restful sleep. and lunesta®(eszopiclone) can he

, he held my administration move america from real energy independence. we have doubled the use of renewable energy, dramatically reduce our dependence on foreign oil. you can read the full statement at your leisure. i will go to questions >> does the president considered the attack in turkey to be a terrorist attack? >> a suicide bombing on the perimeter of an embassy is, by definition, an act of terror. we do not know at this point who is responsible or the motivations behind the attack. the attack itself is clearly an act of terror. >> the birth control -- is this recognition that the initial rules were an overreach? >> not at all. for details about the rulemaking process on which there is news today, i refer you to hhs. i would remind you of a policy that the president outlined last year. in outlining it, he set two important criteria. one, we have to ensure that women have access to preventive services like contraception. the policy also respects religious elites. those criteria have been followed by the department in this role. as part of this process, there is more common

, and people do if you're really trying to save some of your precious energy minutes, et cetera, or it's not working as well as it normally does, it is helpful to have a message board that you can get information to other people. and, so, that's what we're showing here. you can see people are going to be looking for their pets. they're going to be looking for rides. people are going to need to be sharing resources a much as they possibly can. another thing that you can see here is they're going to need to be fair tools and some of the things that people are going to need in order to be able to stay safer within their homes. so, we're just showing sort of a gesture to that with all these different tools here. but then also tarps, people are going to need to cover their windows if their windows are cracked, if their roofs are broken.

stimulate fat cells turning them into brown fat cells. brown cells burn off other fat for energy. in the study experts loaded up mice viagra. they were able to resist gaining weight while at the same time eating a high fat diet. we don't know yet if it works the same in people, but they're looking at it. >>> this weekend a d.c. brewing company plans to introduce a special new beer. the brewer is cooking up abreu called mr. mayor and it's made with -- a brew called mr. mayor and it's made with something called marion barry and we're not kidding. it's a blackberry engineered back in the 1950s by the u.s. department of agriculture and scientists at oregon state university. marion barry's marion barry brew. can you say that fast? >> not fast, but you got to love it. >>> after the break jc hayward will be live in new orleans will be live in new orleans with more from our (woman) 3 days of walking to give a breast cancer survivor a lifetime-- that's definitely a fair trade. whoo! you walk with friends, you meet new friends, and you keep those friendships. it was such a beautiful experi

of young people consuming energy drinks. those drinks can be a downer for teens causing racing heart, slopeness nights and anxiety and high blood pressure. doctors are seeing more cases. the study released by the academy of pediatrics found a can of high let caffeinated energy drink equals drinking a bottle of wine and a few cups of coffee. >> lawsuit files in san jose found that zoloft is no more effective than a sugar pill which is marketed and commonly prescribeed. zoloft is maze -- made by pfizer pfizer did not publish studies that found it as effective as a placebo and pfizer calls this "frivolous." patients should be reimburseed say the lawsuit and they asked the judge to approve two class-action cases. >> cold medications taken off the market because the caps can fail, the maker of the medications or syrups are recalling to million containers. the safety commission says that the child resistant caps can be removed by children posing a poison risk. there have been 12 reports of kids unscrewing the locked cap and four of them ended up ingesting the product. >> next at 6:00 a.m.,

you surprised by the low energy of chuck hagel today on the stand? many people felt he was coached by whoever coached barack obama on his first debate. >> well, you know it reminded me of the joke of the corpse at the wake, that is not to get in the way of drinking and remembering. this is a strange combination of meet the parents and a job interfere where you got to be sure to be unobjectionable, and you have to work with these same people who are berating you to make your tenture a success and you know these hearings are more about them getting a sound bite for their district back home with their interests or their nuclear weapons plan in it, and they're unfortunately not so much about educating anybody on serious issues that we face. so from that perspective senator hagel's demeanor was entirely understandable, and i can't even begin to imagine how incredibly it mustfrustrating it must have been for him. heather hurlburt and david schuster. be will he be confirmed? >> he'll be confirmed. >> john: welcome back to "viewpoint." and its time for the thing of the day. tonight's thing

energying engineering and computer science. >> put this into perspective. how big of a problem is this? >> i'm actually from ohio and when i went back during the election season rveg, they were bringing up how many international students were going to ohio state and graduating and contributed back to the community and wanted to stay to provide their intellect to help with the innovation. the big question is what kind of work visas can they get. what future can they have? at the same time family reunionification reunion i ification. >> we mentioned the numbers. i don't think a lot of folks in the country full low appreciate that shift we have seen. there is a misconception that the overwhelming number of people are from mexico and latin america. why do we think that exists? >> there a number of futures and no doubt that the immigration is the issue for time and we need to be careful in the way we analyze this issue and emphasize it and the immigrant aspects in india. they have been analyzing in the last year and damaging the community and the latino community overall. all these anti-immigrant

on repairs after katrina. the superdome and the energy company entergy are blaming this issue on an abnormality. charlie, norah? >> an abnormality. thank you, jeff. we head across town to the superdome. armen keteyian is there with new video from the moment the game went dark. it's a story only we can bring you. armen, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, charlie. good morning, norah. i had literally just finished an interview with the man in charge of the nfl's entire super bowl game day operation inside the control room when the power went out. the interview was part of a behind the scenes 60 minutes sports story to air wednesday night on showtime. we were talking about the halftime timing clock and the fact that beyonce's show had run three minutes long when everything changed. the search for answers never coming through during the 34-minute blackout. >> the 50 yard line time clock here is so low that had it been illuminated during the halftime show, it would have been in every shot. so we took that out and put it up there so i could see it. >> it uh-o

in the state of california right now. looking at six meters. many buildings have one meter, and yet for energy efficiency and for billing purposes, it helps to separate out the meter so you know how much each space is using. there's been a big issue about the so-called submeetering. we're going to see in a little while some new sub meetering equipment. but this is a method which is cost efficient because it allows each person to get their own bill. when you get your own bill, you know you want to keep your billow. where as if the rental unit came power and you don't pay a separate electrical bill, you might not be quite as careful. >> i believe the current public utilities commission code does require all individual residential units to be individually meters. that's for all new work. >> and for commercial, they allow separate submetering. ok. so we brought the power into the building. we're watching our fingers here. we have other ways we'll seat meters >> we have examples, a wide variety of metering and service equipment that can be chosen. the reason i wanted to show you this is to show you

? by the barrelful? the carful? how about...by the bowlful? campbell's soups give you nutrition, energy, and can help you keep a healthy weight. campbell's. it's amazing what soup can do. campbell's. >>> game with a record-breaking kick return and four touchdown passes, it was a goal line stand by the defense that won the super bowl for the ravens. we'll talk with one of baltimore's defensive leade we gotta sell the car. where would we even start? get the car. hi howard. get in. hi, good to see you. start with an actual written offer when selling your car, no strings attached. carmax. start here. announcer: cbs tonight-- hawaii is going... (screaming) what kind of man kills a... ...cop in cold blood? re-creating a fan-favorite episode... hey! ...from the original hawaii five-o. you think he's going to kill again? the question is: how many people are on the list? with guest star peter weller. it's bang-bang time. kono: he's on the roof. i'm going to draw his fire. take the shot. go retro with the new hawaii five-o. exactly. cbs tonight. >>> good morning to you. it's 8:00. welcome back to "cbs this mor

focus your energy and your researches on texas because they're increasingly young and increasingly latino and african american. >> ahead, hillary clinton leaves the state department hitting the right wing for not living in an evidence-based worlt. and i have some thoughts to talk about my friend and sometimes foe, legendary new york city mayor ed koch. he will be missed. stay with us. alright, bring the model in on the set! ah beautiful. work the camera... work it...work it! those hands. oooh la la! magnifique! what's your secret? what? huh? dawn? how can this be? [ female announcer ] dawn hand renewal with olay beauty helps lock in skin's natural moisture to improve the look and feel of hands in 5 uses. [ sponge ] gotta hand it to your beautiful hands, huh? [ female announcer ] love it, or get double your money back. dawn does more. [ sponge ] so it's not a chore. so i used my citi thankyou card to pick up some accessories. a new belt. some nylons. and what girl wouldn't need new shoes? and with all the points i've been earning, i was able to get us a flight to our favorite climbi

to make my breakfast a big meal so i can have the energy to go workout. >> and we know big things coming up. you mentioned to me you wanted to fight with bradley. he doesn't want to fight you? >> yeah. at this point. i was willing to move up to 147 pounds to challenge him for the title. his promoter offered the deal to us. at this point, it's a fight he didn't want. >> interesting. >> i was really excited about avenging my only loss. but it will happen in the future. >> we know also a local guy with golden boy. what does that mean with dc boxing to have two of the brighter stars? >> it's big. it's letting the other kids know the up and coming fighters they can make it also. so dc boxing has a big upside right now. and i'm looking forward to those young guys to come up and do the same thing that me, my brother are doing right now. >> february 22nd. that belt right there , ladies and gentlemen, is going to stay around this young man's waist. >> oh, yeah. >> right? >> and go back out to my other belts. >> tony and allison, back over to you guys. >> where do you take that belt? to dinner? >>

their grease. >> it will promote the use of alternative energy -- >> the fact that it was coming from kids made it hit home harder. the child shall lead them sort of thing. she set the example for the town. it's great that westerly has a person that we can be proud of and tell the country, hey, look what we're doing on little westerly on the shore. >> if everyone gave back and took time to do something for others, the world would be a better place. [ nurse ] i'm a hospice nurse. britta olsen is my patient. i spend long hours with her checking her heart rate, administering her medication, and just making her comfortable. one night britta told me about a tradition in denmark, "when a person dies," she said, "someone must open the window so the soul can depart." i smiled and squeezed her hand. "not tonight, britta. not tonight." [ female announcer ] to nurses everywhere, thank you, from johnson & johnson. [ female announcer ] to nurses everywhere, for over 75 years people ...with geico... ohhh...sorry!. director's voice: here we go. from the top. and action for over 75 years people have saved mone

energy. read more about these mysterious forces and what scientists hope to find on our science page. and think you've received bad advice about social security? our benefits guru gets to the bottom of that issue in today's "ask larry" column on our business page. all that and more is on our web site, newshour.pbs.org. gwen? >> ifill: and that's the newshour for tonight. on tuesday, we'll return to the immigration debate with a look at the president's plans for reform. i'm gwen ifill. >> woodruff: and i'm judy woodruff. we'll see you online, and again here tomorrow evening. thank you, and good night. >> major funding for the pbs newshour has been provided by: >> bnsf railway. >> macarthur foundation. >> and with the ongoing support of these institutions and foundations. and... >> this program was made possible by the corporation for public broadcasting. and by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like you. thank you. captioning sponsored by macneil/lehrer productions captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org captioning sponsored by wpbt >> this is n.b.r. >> su

but the possible outcome of the game. couple of cards until you're happy with what you're getting, your energy on the cards. the tower all of a sudden, i'd rather see the depth of the devil, so you're literally a basket case. >> what? >> dumb luck, literally walking down the street, you find a 20- dollar bill. >> the other day we're walking down the street and george lucas is walking by us and we go and interview him. >> there you go, dumb luck. most important question, are the 49ers going to win the super bowl, we have to know. >> the universe is going to tell us. it's very very emotional game. i don't know, you know. >> the super bowl this the big easy, baby. >> stay away from overlibation. don't let it become emotional. it's about making those connections and making sure the team is there for each other and make sure you're on the game. but right now, at least the way the card are saying, there's a possibility but you need to work at it. >> he said it was a soft no, so not a definite no, a soft no. they have to keep focused and i have to tell you when he

energy and became moody... that's when i had an honest conversation with my doctor. we discussed all the symptoms... then he gave me some blood tests. showed it was low t. that's it. it was a number -- not just me. [ male announcer ] today, men with low t have androgel 1.62% (testosterone gel). the #1 prescribed topical testosterone replacement therapy, increases testosterone when used daily. women and children should avoid contact with application sites. discontinue androgel and call your doctor if you see unexpected signs of early puberty in a child, or signs in a woman, which may include changes in body hair or a large increase in acne, possibly due to accidental exposure. men with breast cancer or who have or might have prostate cancer, and women who are or may become pregnant or are breastfeeding, should not use androgel. serious side effects include worsening of an enlarged prostate, possible increased risk of prostate cancer, lower sperm count, swelling of ankles, feet, or body, enlarged or painful breasts, problems breathing during sleep, and blood clots in the legs. tell you

. if the people there keep up this level of energy until game time, they will be sound asleep at about 6:00 on sunday. and also we have got wings -- how many people here are going to eat a couple of chicken wings on super bowl sunday? we have got three recipes to share with you today as part of our super bowl wings cook-off. >> smells good. >> three extinctly different recipes, one of them red hot. we'll share those a little later on. >> one of them may require a hazmat suit. >>> and in the wake of cyber attacks that happened to two major newspapers, we have a warning, what you need to do to safeguard your own personal computer to make sure you're safe. >>> natalie is in baltimore. that means tamron hall is over at the news desk with all the headlines. >> hey, matt and savannah and everyone. >>> an explosion at the entrance to the u.s. embassy in turkey. foreign correspondent richard engel is in istanbul with the latest. richard, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. details are still coming in, but witnesses say that a suicide bomber tried to enter the u.s. embassy using a side door,

. the electrical feeders that bring power in showed signs of dekay, something that concerned not only the energy company, entergy, but officials at the superdome. money was paid for repairs and those repairs were made but the system still failed. after the dome went dark during the super bowl it's now fresh meat for the late-night comics. >> the lights went out in the third quarter. it was weird. normally i don't experience a blackout till after the super bowl party. >> you see what happens when beyonce actually sings live? that's what happens. >> someone clapped twice and everything went dark. >> reporter: 34 minutes of near darkness unfolded on 73,000 fans in the stands, a tv audience of 108 million and a camera crew from 60 minutes sports that happened to be in the nerve center, the control room. >> we lost lights. >> reporter: so what did happen? >> it's still a mystery. we're going to get to the bottom of it. >> reporter: doug thornton manages the superdome and says there are two power feeders from the substation that go into the building and the main feeder went out, bringing down the ligh

with older buildings can borrow, interest-free, to make these homes energy efficient. that's going to save a lot of pollution. it is going to stop a lot of pollution. i think we can actually do something here. now, we have a lot of tremendous amount of opposition. >> stephanie: yeah. and it is so surprising from the house republicans. senator, i could talk to you all morning. you have to tell me quickly about the line act before you go. there may be nothing else more important than the long lines that voters faced in november. just tell us about the line act. >> absolutely. well, what's happened in this last election is we saw horrible waits all over the country in virginia some areas four plus hours to vote. in florida, seven hours in some areas. as a matter of fact, some voters didn't vote until 1:30 a.m. on wednesday. 200,000 voters in florida actually gave up. and that was a study done by ohio state. so if it had been a close race, you know it could have made the difference. so what i did is with a really good staff i have here, really looked -- i said look, i don't want to do somethin

institutions, the energy visions and populations in this particular country. so the undeniable progress that we have made, the ethnic diversity that we have observed, and the profound expansion of democracy that we have helped facilitate must be juxtaposed however to the persistence of malignant and often unconscious forces of bye yes that continue to undermine the best potential that we have as american citizens. it gives them the way and we don't know it. you can be a young boy walking down the street with some skills in your hand and saw ice-t and at the phantom and visible by s becomes concrete and definable. the anatomy takes shape in the repulsion of and repugnance to words black or latino or asian or other bodies. just as figments of imagination projected onto the screen of history and what goes on unconsciously what is a stereotype that becomes lethal and deadly when one person seeing another person acts on those stereotypes, that in plus at racism, that ethnic repulsion and all of a sudden this theoretical stuff becomes concrete. stuff that you talk about in classrooms skills over in a

of american democratic institutions, energies, visions, and populations in this particular country. so, the undeniable rain showers progress we have made, the ethnic diversity we have observed, and the profound expansion of democracy we have helped facilitate, must be juxtaposed to the persistence of malignant often unconscious forces of bias that continue to subvert and undermine the best potential we have as american citizens. it gets in the way and we don't know it. you could be a young boy walking down the street with a pair of -- with some skittles in your hand, and some iced tea. and then the phantom invisible bias becomes concrete and definable. the anatomy of bigotry takes shape in the repugnance toward black or latino or asian or other bodies. just as figments of imagination projected on to the screen of history in what goes on unconsciously, what is a stereo type takes shape, and that then stereo type becomes lethal and deadly when one person, seeing another person, acts on those stereotypes, that implicit bias, that up conscious raceism, thatth him in repose, and all that's

in hawaii and now has put his name and energy behind a new law called the steven tyler act, being considered in the legislature there. it would allow people, mostly celebrity celebrities, to file civil suits against paparazzi to take photos of them in areas where they, quote, might otherwise expect privacy. >> like the beach. >> no. >> telephoto lens and shoots through the window of your home, that would then allow the celebrity to file a civil suit. legally speaking, is this a good idea or slippery slope? >> it is a slippery slope. although i would cheer for it, it's not the kind of thing that constitutionally is going to stand up. the reasonable expectation of privacy on a beach would not apply. but if you go to the trouble of putting a shrubbery up around your house, that's what the argument is. i don't know if it will go through. >> i have a big issue with the boo hoo celebrities. they sign a deal -- i don't want to say with the devil. they basically use the press to their advantage when they want to and complain when it's invasive. >> we're talking in your backyard. >> in your living ro

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